While Tobry died alone, facing his worst nightmare? This could not be borne. Tali spun towards Lyf and her lips were forming the word, Die! when he extended a hand. Silver cords unreeled from it into Rannilt’s chest, into Rix’s and out through the doorway towards Tobry.
Rix tried to pull the cord free but it snapped tight. He gasped and doubled over, clutching at his heart.
‘With the pearls you may, perhaps, find the power to end me,’ said Lyf to Tali. ‘But if you try, with my last breath I will tear out their hearts. Who will you sacrifice, to end me? The dying child who has given her all for you? The friend outside who endures his nightmare in a vain attempt to protect you? Or the tainted hero forced to choose between betraying his family and helping you?
‘Or for the sake of vengeance, will you sacrifice all three?’
CHAPTER 106
On her mother’s body, on Mia’s blood, Tali had sworn unbreakable oaths, and now her fingers were quivering on the pearls. By killing Lyf — if she could — she might end the war, or at least delay it until Hightspall could defend itself, and thousands of people who would otherwise die would live. Was that the one’s true purpose?
And why not do it? Rix longed for death, Rannilt was slipping away and, outside, the shifters would soon take Tobry, if they had not already. A painless end was the greatest kindness she could do her friends.
But if she broke her oaths, saved her friends and let Lyf go, a host of innocent people would pay with their lives. She could see them in her mind’s eye, folk she had encountered on the way into Caulderon last time: a crippled girl hobbling on broken crutches, that wailing baby whose limbs were like sticks, the white-haired ancient staggering under the weight of his ailing wife. All were begging her to save them, all dreading she would condemn them.
The chancellor would sacrifice his allies and not be troubled by it afterwards, and perhaps he would be right to do so, for Lyf would never give in. If she let him live, his armies would crack Caulderon open and he would revenge himself on the whole city. What point saving her friends if they were going to die anyway?
Tali’s fingers clenched. She was about to use the pearls when Lyf looked up and smiled, and she choked. He wanted to see the failure in her eyes. He wanted revenge on her most of all.
Damn him! The reckless fury she had suppressed ever since Mia’s death boiled up and Tali saw another way — a terrible way. He’d always protected the master pearl and, if she could destroy it, it might ruin the other pearls as well. It might even finish him — if she had the courage to do it.
Did she? Tali so wanted to live, but if this was the only way to bring Lyf down she had to make the sacrifice, as Tobry had done outside. Yet her sacrifice would be a dreadful way to die.
If she thought about that, she would never be able to do it. Tali doubled over, as if in pain, then grabbed the alkoyl tube Wil had dropped, jerked the cap off and pressed the tip of its needle against the top of her head.
Bracing herself, she prepared to ram the needle through her skull into the shuddering pearl. The alkoyl would destroy it, then eat through her head the way it had burnt through that poor woman’s leg in Cython. A moan rose in her throat; she could still hear those wrenching screams.
Pain flared around the tip of the needle. It was going to be agony, but it had to be done. As Tali thrust, Lyf extended his arm towards her and the tube was wrenched from her fingers and sent bouncing across the floor. Her pearl shrieked the call so loudly that Tali’s head spun and she fell to her hands and knees.
‘I salute your courage,’ said Lyf. ‘But you should not have hesitated.’
‘She not the one,’ sneered Wil, turning his back on Tali and bowing to Lyf. ‘Lord Scribe, you the one.’
Lyf set Deroe’s implements up at the end of the black bench. The top of Tali’s head was throbbing as if the reamer was already grinding through her skull and her bones felt as soft as marrow. She tried to get up but her legs would not support her weight. She had lost.
Lyf was making his preparations when Rix moved so fast that, once again, she lost sight of him. One second he was slumped against the wall, the next his sword had cut through the three heartstrings and the blade was outstretched towards Lyf.
‘Don’t try it,’ Rix said coldly. ‘Once cut with this blade, they can’t be remade.’
He lunged, the titane sword slid between Lyf’s arms and its tip cut him across the chest. Lyf bit down on a gasp as the red ribbons streamed down his front.
‘Having a body means you can die,’ said Rix.
Lyf made an involuntary gesture towards him, but froze it halfway. Tali saw fear in his eyes, quickly hidden.
‘Ah, but when I take your head with the Oathbreaker’s blade,’ said Lyf, ‘it breaks the enchantment forever.’
‘My head is already promised,’ said Rix, with the smile of a man walking gladly to his end, ‘but not to you.’
Lyf pointed the reamer and Tali saw a curse quivering on his lips, but another blow tore it from his hand. Rix took a step forwards and Lyf backed away, hobbling on his remade feet. Rix was forcing him past the stair towards the piles of barrels. Soon Lyf would have to fight. Could this be the end? Tali could not believe that he could be beaten this easily.
‘This the wrong ending,’ said Wil in a nasal whine, and rubbed the brown nodules in his eye sockets until they bled. ‘Lord Scribe has to finish the story.’
As Rix passed the corkscrew stair, a huge figure leapt off it. Tinyhead had crept down, unseen, and all his weight landed on Rix’s shoulders, driving him to the floor and knocking the sword from his hand.
Tinyhead drove his knees into Rix’s back, pressing him down and punching him repeatedly in the head until Rix went still. Tinyhead sprang for the sword and came up with it in his fist.
Tali pulled herself up with the aid of a crate. Rix staggered to his feet, swayed and had to support himself on the stair. Tinyhead struck at him, missing by inches. If he killed Rix with his own sword it would surely break its enchantment and its power over Lyf, because Rix was the last of his line.
‘This too easy,’ wailed Wil. ‘Scribe’s great story can’t end easy.’
Tinyhead glanced at the quivering little figure, shaking his head contemptuously. He took another step, then another. Rix lurched backwards, trying to protect himself with his bare hands.
Tinyhead was about to cut him down when Wil sprang. He landed on Tinyhead’s back, locked spindly legs around his waist and those unnaturally large hands closed around Tinyhead’s throat. Tinyhead dropped the sword and tried to prise the fingers away but Wil’s grip was too strong. He seemed bent on crushing Tinyhead’s windpipe.
Tinyhead threw himself backwards, trying to dislodge the little man. Wil swung around Tinyhead’s waist, landed on top of him and, as Tinyhead kicked and flailed, slammed his head against the floor. Tinyhead’s eyes glazed. He slumped, dazed from the impact and, as Tali watched in horror, Wil calmly strangled him.
Wil rose, breathing heavily through his bloody nose cavity. ‘Contest is even now.’ He put one foot under the sword and flicked it away from Rix.
Tali remembered Lyf’s weakness and saw her opportunity in the same instant. Could he, who had never gone through the proper death rituals, still be linked to his bones? The bones he had protected so carefully?
Lyf must have come to the same realisation, for suddenly he was diving for the sword.
‘Yes, yes!’ cried Wil, dancing a jig. ‘This how it supposed to end, Scribe against the one. Kill her, Lord. Kill her now.’